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By The Associated Press
NEW YORK - Billy Bruton's
two-out pinch single in the 11th
inning drove in Gates Brown and'
gave the Detroit Tigers a 1-0 vic-
tory over the New York Yankees
last night.
Brown opened the 11th with a
pinch single and then moved to
second on an infield out before
Bruton, swinging for Tiger start-
er Dave Wickersham, tagged Pete
Mikkelsen for the game-wining
hit.
* , *
ST. LOUIS-Clay Dalrymple's
ninth-inning homer, a two-run
blast to right, gave National
League leading Philadelphia a 6-5
victory over St. Louis last night
after the Cardinals had blasted
perfect game pitcher Jim Bun-
ning.

Tony Gonzalez opened the Phil-
lie ninth against reliever Ron
Taylor with a double. Dalrymple
then unloaded his second homer
of the season onto the right-cen-
ter pavilion roof.
* * *
LOS ANGELES-A throwing er-
ror by Kansas City's George Wil-
liams led to an unearned run in
the fifth inning that brought the
Los Angeles Angels their 10th
straight victory 1-0 over the Ath-
letics last night in the first game
of a doubleheader.
* *, *
PITTSBURGH - The Pitts-
burgh Pirates pounded three Cin-
cinnati pitchers for '13 hits last
night and whipped the Reds 8-3.
The Pirates hammered eight
hits off Joey Jay including three

i

SPORTS SHORTS:
Doctors Diagnose Alois'
Illness as Meningitis

By The Associated Press
BOSTON-Doctors at a Boston
hospital diagnosed Cleveland third
baseman Max Alvis' sudden illness
as meningitis last night but did
not comment on the seriousness
of the ailment.
Aivis was taken to Santa Maria
hospital with a high temperature.
Members of the Indians team
went to the hospital as a pre-
cautionary measure and for pre-
liminary examinations.
* * *
Olympic Politics
LAUSANNE, Switzerland - The
International Olympic Committee
reversed its field yesterday and
admitted Indonesia to the Tokyo
Games, and practically slammed
the door on South Africa.
The IOC executive board lifted
its suspension of Indonesia after
it received a cable from that coun-
try's Olympic committee which
said it wanted to take part in the
Games this October "on an equal
basis with all other nations."
South Africa had been ordered
to agree to pick a mixed team and
issue a statement opposing the
racial policy of apartheid. , It
agreed to the mixed team but re-
fused the statement.
* * *
Arnie Leads
CLEVELAND -- Arnold Palmer
fired a seven-under-par 64 yester-
day for his lowest round of the
year and took charge of the lead
at the halfway point of the
$100,000 Cleveland Open Golf
Tournament.
The defending champion's 26-
hole score is 131, one better than
Dick Sikes who also had the
crowds gasping in his first PGA-
sponsored tourney. The two-time
Public Links champion f r o m
Springdale, Ark., matched Pal-
mer's 64.
Sikes, also national collegiate
champion in 1963, turned pro after
the Masters this past April. He
and Palmer each had eight birdies
and a bogey.
Jack Nicklaus, off his game
since the Masters, tacked a 65 to
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his opening 68 and was in third
place at 133.
Al Geiberger, the first-round
leader, needed 70 strokes yesterday
and was tied at 134 with George
Bayer, who had a second-round
69.
Gentile Out
LOS ANGELES - Jim Gentile,
Kansas City Athletics first base-
man, will be out of action indef-
initely with a pulled rib cartilage,
it was announced last night.
* * *
Shook Wins
EAST LANSING - Patti Shook
of Valparaiso College won the Na-
tional Women's Collegiate golf
championship yesterday, defeating
Joyce Kazmierski of Michigan
State, 2 and 1, in the 36-hole
finals on the Michigan State Uni-
versity course.
McKinley in
Wimbledon
Quarterfinals
WIMBLEDON, England (P)-De-
fending champion Chuck McKin-
ley had his troubles with a left-
hander again yesterday in the
Wimbledon tennis tournament but
finally won through to the round
of eight, where his opponent will
be another southpaw.
McKinley, who romped to the
title last year without losing a
set, went four sets before he pre-
vailed over Britain's Billy Knight,
8-6, 6-4, 2-6, 6-4 in the fourth
round.
McKinley is the only American
left in the men's singles, with a
week to go in the tournament.
There were 25 when the tourney
started.
The only other American in the
last 16 and the only Negro com-
peting, Arthur Ashe from Rich-
mond, Va., lost in straight sets to
the No. 1 seed, Roy Emerson of
Australia, 6-3, 6-2, 7-5.
Rafael Osuna, Mexican holder of
the U.S. singles title, knocked out
the other American, Ron Holm-
berg of Brooklyn, 6-4, 6-4, 2-6, 6-3,
in a delayed third-round match.
Softball Schedule
SOFTBALL GAMES
Monday
Phamracology vs. Animal Care
Gamma Alpha vs. Bloops
Tuesday
Dents vs. University Hospital
Bio-Chemistry vs. Adams
j Wednesday
Eng. Mech. vs. Misfits
Psych "C" vs. Conger House
Education vs. AFIT
Economics vs. Gashers
Thursday
Math vs. Raygar's Tigers
Zoology vs. Cooley Lab
Chemical Eng. vs. Psych. A
Nuclear Eng. vs. Catherine A. C.
* * *
All games will be played at 6:30
p.m. on the diamond south of Ferry
Field.

apiece by Bill Virdon, and Rober-
to Clemente.
Virdon had a triple and a two-
run double and Clemente rapped
two doubles.
* * *
BOSTON - Pinch hitter Russ
Nixon slammed a two-out two-run
homer in the ninth inning, giving
Boston a 3-2 victory over Cleve-
land last night.
Nixon batted for relief pitcher
Dick Radatz and hit his first
homer of the season off Tommy
John into the right field stands.
Felix Mantilla had singled with
one out, and John got Carl Yas-
trzemski for the second out be-
fore Nixon connected.
ST. PAUL-MINNEAPOLIS -
Minnesota rookie Gerry Arrigo
pitched a one-hitter-Mike Hersh-
berger's leadoff single in the ninth
inning-as the Twins defeated the
Chicago White Sox 2-0 in the first
game of a twi-night doubleheader
last night.
Arrigo, a 23-year-old lefthand-
er, had allowed four base runners
through the first eight innings.
Then, Hershberger lashed a solid
single to right field on the second
pitch of the ninth.
CHICAGO - Pinch hitter Leo
Burke singled home Doug Clemens
with the running run yesterday as
the Chicago Cubs rallied for two
runs in the bottom of the 10th
inning to gain a see-saw 7-6 vic-
tory over the Houston Colts.
The lead changed hands four
times in the last two innings, with
the Colts moving in front 5-4 on
a four-run rally in the top of
the ninth and again 6-5, when
Jerry Grote, a rookie catcher, hit
his first major league home run.
Major League
Standings
AMERICAN LEAGUE
W L Pct. GB
Baltimore 43 25 .633 -
New York 38 27 .585 3Y2
Chicago 36 27 .572 4Y2
Minnesota. 36 33 .522 7%
Cleveland 32 33 .493 9%
Los Angeles 34 37 .478 10/
Detroit 31 34 .477 10%
Boston 32 39 .464 111/2
Washington 29 43 .402 16
Kansas City 26 43 .377 17%
YESTERDAY'S RESULTS
Minnesota 2; Chicago 0 (2nd inc)
Los Angeles 1, Kansas City 0 (2nd inc)
Baltimore 9, Washington 4 (13 inn)
Detroit 1, New York 0 (11 inn)
Boston 3, Cleveland 2
TODAY'S GAMES
Kansas City at Los Angeles (n)
Detroit at New Fork
Cleveland at Boston
Baltimore at Washington
Chicago at Minnesota
NATIONAL LEAGUE

THERE'S ALWAY ROOM
FOR ONE MORE
ON THE STAFF OF
THE SUMMER DAILY
During your stay in Ann Arbor, have
your PRESCRIPTIONS on file at:
The Village Apothecary
1112 S. University
Open 9 to 9
F2'
Meet the Right People
The purpose of our organization, using
established techniques of personality
appraisal and an IBM system, is to
introduce unmarried persons to others
whose background and ideals are
congenial with their own. Interviews
by appointment. Phone after 9 a.m.,
NO 2-4867.
MICHIGAN SCIENTIFIC
INTRODUCTION SERVICE
WHY subscribe to the
SUMMER DAILY?
1) Apartment not air-conditioned?
DAILY makes a great fan!
2) worried about sun stroke?
DAILY makes a good sun shield!
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DAILY makes good wrapping
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4) Worried about grass stains?
Sit on the DAILY!
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F25
CAR SERVICE, ACCESSORIES
ANNOUNCING
Whit's Truck Rental
202 W. Washington St.
Ann Arbor1
Call
NO 5-6875
Pick-ups Panels
Small Vans
MUSICAL MDSE.,
RADIOS, REPAIRS
A-1 New and Used Instruments
BANJOS, GUITARS, AND BONGOS
Rental Purchase Plan
PAUL'S MUSICAL REPAIR
119 W. Washington
GUITARS, ETC.
Make Repairs, Buy and Sell
Private and Group Instruction
Hoots Daily
Herb David Guitar Studio
NO 5-8001
209 S. STATE
X

LUTHERAN STUDENT CHAPEL
Hill Street at South Forest Ave., Ann Arbor, Mich.
SUNDAY EVENING MEETINGS 7:00 P.M.
We invite you to consider the richness of the deep word, Salva-
tion. Under the guidance of our qualified speakers we will disabuse
ourselves of the distortions of uncritical piety and attempt to recdpture
its true meaning in Biblical thought, in the dimensions of bodily and
psychic health and the powerful current of modern human history.
June 28 "'Man' and 'Salvation' in the Bible"--George E. Menden-
hall, Professor of Near Eastern Studies, University of Michigan.
July 5 ."The Wholeness of Man: a Psychological Perspective"-Paul
T. Wilson, M.D., University of Michigan Neuropsychiatric In-
stitute.
July 12 "Post-Christian Transformations of the Concepts 'Man' and
and 'Salvation': Kafka, Camus, Golding"-Rev. Gordon Jones,
Rector, St. Andrews Episcopal Church.
July 19 "Education as an Element of Social Redemption"-Allan
Pfnister, Professor of Philosophy and Dean of the Faculty, Wit-
tenberg University.
July 26 "Healing: Medicine and the Spirit"-Rev. Malcolm Bolling-
er, Chaplain, University of Michigan Hospital.
August 2 "'Salvation' as a Political Idea"-Frank Grace, Professor
of Political Science, University of Michigan.

CLIP AND SAVE :'
I I
THE FIRST UNITARIAN CHURCH OF ANN ARBOR
annouunees it annual '
SUMMER SUNDAY EVENING FORUM,
THEME: 1984-WHAT THE NEXT TWENTY YEARS WILL BRING;
E '
I tI
* June 28-"Cities and Architecture in 1984"
Leonard K. Eaton, Assoc. Prof. of Architecturet
I .,
July 5-"Social Structure and Organization in 1984" ;
' Robert 0. Blood, Jr., Assoc. Prof. of Sociology .;
* July 12-"Edudcation in 1984";
Stanford C. Ericksen, Director of the Center for
Research on Learning and Teaching f
! Julv 19 --"World Poltics in 1984" i

WESLEY FOUNDATION AND
FIRST METHODIST CHURCH
State and Huron Streets
668-6881
Minister-Hoover Rupert
Campus Minister-Eugene Ransom
Associate Campus Minister-Jean Robe
Morning Worship at 9:00 and 11:15 a.m.-
"That the Next Generation May Know,"
Dr. Rupert will be speaking.
Communion on May 13, 7:00 a.m. followed by
breakfast-out by 8 a.m.
ZION LUTHERAN CHURCH
1501 W. Liberty St.
Ralph B. Piper, David Bracklein,
Fred Hottfreter, Pastors
Worship Services-8:30 and 11:15 a.m.
Holy Communion - Second Sunday of each
month.
Church School-9:45 a.m.
Holy Baptism-First Sunday of month.
Nursery facilities during worship services and
church school.
BETHLEHEM UNITED CHURCH
OF CHRIST
432 S. Fourth St.
NO 5-6149
Sunday Worship Service-9:30 and 10:45 a.m.
Sunday Church School-9:30 and 10:45 a.m.

FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST
SCIENTIST
1833 Washtenaw Ave.
For transportation call NO 8-7048.
9:30 a.m. Sunday School for pupils from 2
to 20 years of age.
11 :00 a.m. Sunday morning church service.
11:00 a.m. Sunday School for pupils from 2
to 6 years of age.
A free reading room is maintained at 306 E.
Liberty, open daily except Sundovs and
holidays from 10:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.;
Monday evenings from 7:00 to 9:00 p.m.